What’s going on here? Blackstone increased its bid for Hipgnosis Songs Fund, hoping to strike a chord with the British music rights company. What does this mean? Hipgnosis owns the back catalogs of artists including Beyoncé, Blondie, and Mark Ronson. So not only has the company caused a stir in the charts, but it has the business world tuned in, too. Hipgnosis had already agreed to a buyout offer from US rival Concord Chorus which – at £0.93 ($1.15) per share – values Hipgnosis at $1.4 billion. But Blackstone’s upped proposal is £1.00 ($1.24) per share, making a total of $1.5 billion. Hipgnosis has said it’ll recommend the higher offer to shareholders if it’s formalized – but Blackstone needs to check the books before it can write that offer in ink. Investors seem to sense a bidding war, pushing the share price up to £1.02 ($1.26) on Monday. Why should I care? Zooming in: A British bargain. Hipgnosis was trading at £0.53 ($0.65) in March, mainly impacted by uncertainty over the value of its music rights. That’s a popular story in the UK: firms are trading for cheap relative to their own history and other markets, no matter if they’re big or small. So now, other companies are scouring the UK’s offices, keen to snap up firms with high potential while their prices are lying low. The bigger picture: Distribution is the talk of Hollywood town. Artists, music rights firms, and social media companies have been vying for their share of streams. Universal Music Group even pulled its artists’ music from TikTok, after the two companies failed to agree. The ban included Taylor Swift’s songs – but after fans made their demands loud and clear, Swift teamed up with TikTok to release her latest album in a first-of-its-kind in-app feature. That may well undermine Universal’s authority, especially over artists with a penchant for short-form video fame. |